Nation: To Fulfill a Historic Role
At hearings on the Administration's civil rights bill, the Senate Commerce Committee last week heard two opposing points of view from two star witnesses, both Southerners.
"The President and the Attorney General," rumbled Mississippi's Segregationist Governor Ross Barnett, "have encouraged demonstrations, freedom rides, sit-ins, picketing and actual violation of local laws. Gentlemen, if you pass this civil rights legislation, you are passing it under the threat of mob action and violence on the part of Negro groups and under various types of intimidation from the executive branch of this government."
By pressing for civil rights legislation, raved Barnett, the Kennedy brothers were aiding a "world Communist conspiracy to divide and conquer" the U.S. To prove that the Negro push for equality is linked with Communism, Barnett reached into his briefcase and pulled out a poster issued by the Georgia Commission on Education. In a display reminiscent of the late Joe McCarthy's famed "I-have-here-in-my-hand" performance, Barnett claimed that the picture in the poster showed Negro Leader Martin Luther King Jr. at the "Highlander Folk School for Communist Training, Monteagle, Tenn." *
Appeal to Ideals. From Georgia-born Secretary of State Dean Rusk the Committee heard a movingly eloquent appeal, not just for the Administration bill but for an end to all race discrimination in the U.S. "Foreign policy," he said, "is not the major reason we should eliminate discrimination. It is not some thing we should do merely to look good abroad. The primary reason why we must attack the problems of discrimination is rooted in our basic commitments as a nation and a people. We must try to eliminate discrimination not to make others think better of us, but because it is incompatible with the great ideals to which our democratic society is dedicated." The U.S., Rusk went on to conclude, "cannot fulfill its historic role unless it fulfills its commitment to its own people."
South Carolina's Senator Strom Thurmond, an unyielding segregationist, asked Rusk whether he would not "agree that we have been making great progress in this country." Rusk agreed, but added that "there is still unfinished business." Asked Thurmond: "Who has been responsible for that progressthe white man or the Negro?" Rusk replied softly: "Both, working together." Did Rusk approve of the Negro demonstrations?, Thurmond continued. "If I were denied what our Negro citizens are denied," said the Secretary of State, "I would demonstrate too."
Appeal to Fear. In testimony on legal aspects of the Administration bill, Assistant Attorney General Burke Marshall, head of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division, touched fleetingly on two seldom mentioned points that are likely to take on greater prominence as the debate continues.
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